17 college basketball players charged in point-shaving scheme: Indictment


Former college All-American Antonio Blakeney is among 17 basketball players named in a point-shaving scheme to fix games in the NCAA and Chinese Basketball Association and rig bets, according to an indictment unsealed Thursday in Philadelphia. 

The alleged scheme ran from September 2022 to February 2025 and defrauded various sportsbooks and individual bettors.

“The sportsbooks would not have paid out those wagers had they known that the defendants fixed those games,” the indictment said.

In total, 20 defendants are named in the indictment, including basketball players who agreed, in exchange for bribes, to fix NCAA and Chinese Basketball Association games. So-called fixers who were operating the scheme then placed big bets on those games.

“In placing these wagers on games they had fixed, the defendants defrauded sportsbooks, as well as individual sports bettors, who were all unaware that the defendants had corruptly manipulated the outcome of these games that should have been decided fairly, based on genuine competition and the best efforts of the players,” the indictment said.

Two of the players named in the indictment, Cedquavious Hunter and Dequavion Short, both of New Orleans, were sanctioned in November by the NCAA for allegedly fixing games.

Two other defendants, Marves Fairley and Shane Hennen, allegedly recruited Blakeney, an All-American college player and a leading scorer in the CBA, offering bribe payments in exchange for Blakeney underperforming in games. Blakeney also allegedly recruited other players from his team to join the scheme. Fairley and Hennen are also charged in a separate illegal gambling case involving the NBA.

After profiting on the fixed CBA games, Fairley, Hennen and Blakeney allegedly turned their attention to fixing NCAA men’s basketball games. Blakeney is named but not charged. Federal prosecutors noted some of the defendants are “charged elsewhere.”

They are accused of recruiting players who would help ensure their team failed to cover the spread of the first half of a game or an entire game, the indictment said. The fixers would then place wagers on those games through sportsbooks, betting against the team whose player or players they had bribed to engage in this point-shaving scheme, the indictment said.

The bribe payments ranged from $10,000 to $30,000 per game, a sum prosecutors said exceeded most players’ legitimate opportunity to make money by marketing their name, image and likeness. The fixers also allegedly targeted players on teams that were underdogs in games and sought to have them fail to cover the spreads in those games.

The indictment mentions 29 games that were allegedly fixed.



Source link

  • Related Posts

    WATCH: Trump unveils long-awaited health care plan

    President Donald Trump unveiled his “Great Health Care Plan,” but details remain scarce, raising questions about congressional support and its impact as premiums rise. Source link

    Pittsburgh researchers developing lifesaving robot “dogs”

    Pittsburgh — At Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, researchers are hard at work developing robot “dogs” designed to assist in situations too dangerous for humans to help. “This is the dog…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Colby Cosh: Can the courts force a Catholic hospital to kill?

    Iran restores SMS as phased rollback of internet blackout begins | Internet News

    Iran restores SMS as phased rollback of internet blackout begins | Internet News

    A routine eye treatment is raising new concerns for glaucoma patients

    A routine eye treatment is raising new concerns for glaucoma patients

    Ted Sarandos says Netflix will commit to 45-day theatrical releases

    Ted Sarandos says Netflix will commit to 45-day theatrical releases

    Durban’s Super Giants v Paarl Royals – Cricket

    Durban’s Super Giants v Paarl Royals – Cricket

    Kirk LaPointe: Why killing B.C.'s Small Business Roundtable was a mistake

    Kirk LaPointe: Why killing B.C.'s Small Business Roundtable was a mistake